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cludder
▪ I. cludder, n. Obs. or dial. (ˈklʌdə(r)) Also 9 dial. cluther. [A variant of clodder: cf. the vb. See also clutter n.] † 1. A clotted or jelly-like mass; = clodder. Obs.1545 T. Raynalde Byrth Man. Hh iij, It wyll be concreet & congeyled in a cludder lyke a lyuer. 2. A crowd, heap, cluster; = clutt...
Oxford English Dictionary
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clowder
clowder obs. var. of cludder, clutter.1801 in Strutt Sports & Past. i. i. 19 A clowder of cats.
Oxford English Dictionary
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croodle
▪ I. croodle, v.1 Sc. (ˈkruːd(ə)l) [f. prec.] intr. To make a continued soft low murmuring sound; esp. to coo as a dove. Hence ˈcroodling ppl. a.17.. The Croodlin Doo in Child Eng. & Sc. Ballads II. 363 My little wee croodlin doo. a 1810 Tannahill Bonnie Wood Poems (1846) 132 The cushat croodles amo...
Oxford English Dictionary
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clodder
▪ I. † ˈclodder, n. Obs. exc. dial. [See next, and cf. clotter, cludder, clutter.] A clotted or curdled mass, a clot.a 1400 Mary & Cross 326 in Leg. Rood 142 In cloddres of blod his her was clunge. 1657 Reeve God's Plea 24 Thou lookest like raw flesh, yea like a prodigious clodder. 1698 Christ Exalt...
Oxford English Dictionary
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clutter
▪ I. clutter, n. (ˈklʌtə(r)) [This and the vb. of same form appear to have arisen late in the 16th c. and to have become suddenly very common, after which they went to a great extent out of literary use, though retained in some senses dialectally, and in U.S. In sense 1 the word was evidently a phon...
Oxford English Dictionary
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